China bride price experiment promotes women living with future husbands to test compatibility before cash changes hands – Technologist

One woman, Yu Fei, who had already been through a divorce and had two children, decided to live with her current husband before receiving the bride price.

The cost of a bride price in many parts of China is getting out of control, prompting an official clampdown. Photo: Baidu

In her village of Lingang, the average bride price – a sum of money traditionally paid by a man to the bride’s family – is between 700,000 and 800,000 yuan (US$97,000 to US$110,000), far higher than most places in China.

Hu Mingliang, a local village official, said that a gender imbalance had fuelled fierce competition in the marriage market, inflating the size of the payment.

A sought-after young woman with multiple suitors may find themselves involved in a bidding market, which in some cases can see the bride price reaching hundreds of thousands of yuan, possibly even topping one million yuan (US$140,000).

Yu said that inflation-inducing competition is not limited to the groom’s side, as bride’s families also participate in this rivalry to “save face”.

“Some parents think that if that woman got a bride price of 680,000 yuan (US$94,000), my daughter must get 720,000 yuan,’” Yu told the Shanghai Observer.

Yu’s decision did not remove the bride price from the equation, partly because she had two sons.

Although her ex-husband provided financial support, the potential costs of her sons’ future weddings remained a significant concern, especially if Yu did not receive a bride price that could help cover these expenses.

Yu hopes that by accepting a lower bride price, she will help set a precedent to lower expectations.

“Lv Yichen and I are both in our thirties and looking for a partner with whom to share our lives. Before we married, I told him that a bride price of 120,000 yuan (US$16,600) would be enough.

“We decided to live together first to test our compatibility, and if things worked out, he would then pay the bride price,” said Yu.

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Young people in China are refusing high bride prices and expensive dowries, hoping to remove them from the marriage equation. Photo: Shutterstock

Onlineobservers are dubious that the culture shift will spread.

“She is remarried with two children, but still asking for ‘only’ 120,000 yuan as a bride price? My goodness!” one person said.

“It’s terrifying that 120,000 yuan is considered low,” added another.

A third person said: “Paying the bride price only if compatible? Is this ‘cash on delivery’? This is becoming increasingly absurd!

“Why not adopt an installment payment plan over three years, with a small payment made every day? That way, neither side is at a disadvantage. It’s becoming more ridiculous!”

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